Dismissed Batsman out batter in as MCC approves gender-neutral terms
The batsman has been sent back to the pavilion, and there is a new batter at the crease.
The Marylebone Cricket Club has approved amendments to the laws of the game which will see the gender-neutral terms âbatterâ and âbattersâ replace âbatsmanâ and âbatsmenâ.
Australian star batters Steve Smith and Alyssa Healy.Credit:Getty
The new terminology, effective immediately, has been brought in to âreinforce cricketâs status as an inclusive game for allâ, the MCC - the custodians of the laws of cricket - said in a statement on Wednesday.
The move will no doubt raise the hackles of some, who will deride the change as political correctness gone mad. Some fans may also object to a term used in baseball being formally recognised in cricket.
Western Australia Cricket Association chief executive Christina Matthews, a former Australia international, called for the game to introduce gender-neutral terms in February 2017, but when the laws were redrafted in April that year it was agreed, after consultation with the International Cricket Council and key figures in womenâs cricket, that âbatsmanâ and âbatsmenâ would remain.
But, with the rise of the womenâs game, there has already been a shift among governing bodies, commentators, media and players - both male and female - to the word âbatterâ.
âThe changes announced today reflect the wider usage of the terms âbatterâ and âbattersâ which has occurred in cricketing circles in the intervening period,â the MCC said in the statement.
âThe move to âbatterâ is a natural progression, aligning with the terms of bowlers and fielders that already sit within the laws.â
The MCCâs assistant secretary of cricket and operations Jamie Cox said the term reflected the changing landscape of the game.
âUse of the term âbatterâ is a natural evolution in our shared cricketing language and the terminology has already been adopted by many of those involved in the sport,â the former Tasmania batsman and Australia selector said. âIt is the right time for this adjustment to be recognised formally and we are delighted, as the guardians of the laws, to announce these changes today.â
The change comes at a time when world cricket is grappling with the full member status of Afghanistan, whose future in the game is unclear after the Taliban indicated it would not support women playing.
The appropriateness of gender-specific terms such as the fielding position âthird manâ and ânightwatchmanâ, a term used to describe a lower-order batter being sent to the crease late in the day to protect a more accomplished batter, will likely now be widely debated in cricket circles.
âHere we are, in 2017, using terms such as 12th man, batsman, fieldsman and nightwatchman without a second thought,â Matthews told the PerthNow website in 2017.
âIn my view, thereâs no commonsense reason why [the terms canât be changed]. I think itâs just something people have held on to.
âWords matter, and words demonstrate respect as well. By not changing the terms, youâre disrespecting half the population.
âIâm not saying people are deliberately trying to offend but itâs a bit like bullying - whether youâre bullied or not is dictated by the person who is on the end of it, not the person whoâs doing it.â
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